sfx2000
Part of the Furniture
Why didn't you guys pile on ASUS for its ROG router?
Some folks have dinged the marketing there as well
Outside of the hype - sometimes they do have tangible changes that "can" improve things well beyond just gaming...
Why didn't you guys pile on ASUS for its ROG router?
Prospective buyers would be advised to not be misled by the Linksys' AC3200 class rating for the 32X. What you're getting for practical purposes is a 3x3 AC1900 class with one 5 GHz radio that supports contiguous 160 MHz bandwidth. The stated 3200 Mbps maximum link rate math works out to 600 Mbps (2.4 GHz) + 2600 Mbps (5 GHz) = 3200. If you don't have a device that supports 160 MHz bandwidth, the 5 GHz link rate falls back to 1300 Mbps, which added to the 2.4 GHz 600 Mbps yields 1900 Mbps.
Prospective buyers would be advised to not be misled by the Linksys' AC3200 class rating for the 32X. What you're getting for practical purposes is a 3x3 AC1900 class with one 5 GHz radio that supports contiguous 160 MHz bandwidth. The stated 3200 Mbps maximum link rate math works out to 600 Mbps (2.4 GHz) + 2600 Mbps (5 GHz) = 3200. If you don't have a device that supports 160 MHz bandwidth, the 5 GHz link rate falls back to 1300 Mbps, which added to the 2.4 GHz 600 Mbps yields 1900 Mbps.
I could not disagree more strongly with the notion that it's ok for a business to sell "snake oil" with overinflated claims that they know in many circumstances will never be achieved and that the "blame" rests entirely on people for not figuring out what is or isn't accurate. The party in the best position to know the capabilities of a product are the people who make it - the onus should rest on them to make plain and accurate statements. Of course some level of common sense and due diligence is required of any interested buyer but turning to technically oriented forums and sites such as this should be an option for those of us interested in this stuff, not a necessity for everyone to sort out the one sliver of truth from the mountain of marketing obfuscation that has unfortunately become the norm in this area.
One thing I can say about this router is that Linksys went away from that horrible web GUI.
lol and thats got to be a good thing
i see tp link has also started to change its gui with the release of the c3150 v2
now if we can just get netgear to rejig that slow as gui and improve its feature set thing would be on a much more even playing field
One thing I can say about this router is that Linksys went away from that horrible web GUI.
Care to provide some UI screens and workflows - UI/UX is hard stuff...
for the tplink c3150 v2 see
Not sure what horrible is - horrible seems to be a subjective comment, and doesn't have an objective basis behind it.
The Linky SmartWifi WebGUI is minimally functional... challenge for some is that it's somewhat limited in how to tweak the stuff under the hood...
Moving forward - @sm00thpapa - Care to provide some UI screens and workflows - UI/UX is hard stuff...
Netgear doesn't look good, but functionality-wise it was ok.
A lot of these manufacturers need to hire real web designers instead of leaving the web design in the hands of a software engineer.
here is the new gui for dlink , pretty basic
you must not have played with a netgear for a while then , they seem to have screwed up the attached device list and now everything runs slow as
The Linksys Smart Wifi looks nice, but it's not intuitive to use - that's the one I've had to deal with a couple of times these past few years.
You are correct that device often limits link rate. But more streams on the router alone can push out the Rate vs. Range curve and improve performance. This is shown by higher rankings of 4x4 routers in the Charts, all tested with 2x2 STA.Ultimately for most AC1900 and above Router/AP's - they're all essentially AC1200 class at the end of the day, since the clients are really the driver, not the AP itself.
At least asus actually does provide gaming related features like pre configured QoS that is favourable for games.
true but most arent skilled when it comes to networking that having preconfigured QoS profiles that actually favours games is useful. Ive seen countless threads complaining about bufferbloat on asus auto QoS when it is the result of their pre set QoS favouring games over other things including web browsing which causes tests to look bad. Asus does provide some benefit from calling itself a gaming router.not in any meaningful way
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